FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 1966 PAGE TWO:, T'S'E MICHIGAN DAILY - - - FILMS Saturday Night, Sunday Morning' Has Active Photography, Plot and Characters "For as many of you as have] been baptized unto Christ have P -, 4 I . ASHOK TALWAR Singing the Folk Music of India put on Christ." GAL CHURCH 530 Wes i i I AIONS 3:27 OF CHRIST st Stadium By BETSY COHN. The untiring camera in "Satur- day Night and Sunday Morning,". scans the dusty English industrial town, peers into well worn village homes and looks askance at the tired and dirty remnants of the factory town. Working with three "ologies": socio-, psycho- and bio-, this ac- tive camera plus plot and char- acters work to blend, strengthen and sometimes aggravate one an-, other. Arthur Seaton (Albert Finney) is a worker who has become mech- anized and somewhat embitteredj by the five days a week factory grind. His exasperation is monot-. ony and his story .is the fight he wages against it. With mashed teeth, sweat and hard labor, he merely functions during the week:I on weekends he explodes -- beer,i betting and women . .. they serve expressions from every angle, the movie does benefit from low as his "off days" retreat and his turns its probing lens toward the key drama through which it is ineffective palliative. London town, commenting silent- projected as the intense moments, He has an affair with the wife ly on the hardened faces of the such as a nightmarish ride in an of a co-worker; she gets preg- people and their poverty. Under amusement park, resembling a nant, he gets beaten by a jeal- the direction of Karel Reisz, the journey through a vividly light- ous husband's entourage. He next film moves at a steady and even ed, never-ending, concentric cir- encounters Doreen (Shirley Ann pace; the ticky tack sounds of the cle; solidify into permanent and Field), a woman equal in his streets blending in with the grind- impressive moments. strength and vibrance, sharing his ing harsh noises of the steel fac- The characters, music and light- disdain for the innocuous life of tory, harmonizing adeptly with the ing fade out quietly; we only his TV-motivated parents, who soft sounds of the interspersed love know that Arthur realizes his need are . . . "dead from the neck up." scenes. for change . . . and will continue Albert Finney seems content Like "Morgan," also under the to fight boredom. Undoubtedly, the and well-qualified to make the direction of Reisz, there is a subtle viewer does not have to wage the movie center about his struggle to ingenuity in the use of camera to same battle; the very lively . and get away from the life that his explore shadowed crevices and to sensitive acting of Finney with environment is trying to pattern make strikingly suggestive glanc- the amusing and fulfilling carica- for him. He looks for enjoyment es at vivid posters such as "Life ture types of minor parts, the geo- in everyday things and fights to is glorious." metric viewpoint of the camera, purify the static and polluted air Perhaps the psychological dra- and other minor effects, make around him. ma loses some of its impact by Cinema II's offering this week, The camera, after fully exploit- running simultaneously with a so- worthwhile viewing for any "olo- ing Finney's anatomy and facial cial documentary. Nevertheless, gy." I TONIGHT mittij4TONIGHT - I Phone 482-2056 OPEN 5:30 P.M. NOW SHOWING -FREE H 1EATERS- JOEL SAXE *GENE BARKIN Singing the Folk Music of USA Special Guest DSR. HAZEL LOSH Talkin' 'bout them "BOlues" Director Incorporates 'Self-Help' Policy To Replace 'Fix-up, Clean-up' Program (aontinued f-rom Page 1) profit corpqrations is patterned after a plan. now in effect in Dela-. ware, Pa. In this area, several ministers have . formed a group. which purchases run-down hous- ing units, renovates, them and thenrents apartments at low cost. The first 14 houses have already been opened, offering units at $50 a month. CHIP hopes to set up a similar project. However,. approval from the - city- government is needed. The Wade House is financed' primarily through the Unitedi Fund, donations from- three- local Philadelphia foundations, and the Friends' church. CHIP does not, however, receive fundsr from the United Fund. Money for this pro-, j ect is received from the founda- tions and the neighborhood. j Overtones of Black Power According to Roose, at the be-., ginning of the mass activating of CHIP, some of the local commun- ity leaders were doubtful and felt that perhaps a project connected with Wade House should not be involved in something which had overtones of Black Power and might turn into a race riot. Since the results have been productive, opposition for the most part has subsided. Roose, commenting on the re- action, said, "The poor have been denied everything and then the ing committee. "The poverty pro-} white power structure is upset by gram, as it presently is set up can-1 two words-Black Power-said by one guy, Stokely Carmichael. Peo- ple are just about calling for his neck. Five years ago they were after Malcolm X, and five years before that they were after Mar- tin Luther King. Who will they be after five years from now? The local organizations of Wade House have also been opposed to the Greater Chester Movement, a program of the Office of Economic Opportunity. Until recently, this group, like all poverty programs, has not involved local residents of the ghetto on the city wide steer- not involve the poor and therefore is neither desirable or significantly productive. In the last two years, the Chester movement has spent $2;400,000.. There are questions about where these funds are going that the local residents wants an- swered," Roose said. Riots in 1964 The Greater Chester Movement was set up as a result of the race riots in 1963-64. The riots were caused by inferior educational facilities in a local elementary school. Roose also points out that CHIP is not a civil rights movement but rather a movement for the poor- white and black. Organization of poor whites is a part of the long range goal. "If issues which are common to both poor whites and poor blacks are dealt with, I think the two groups will work together. I'd like to try this type of organ- izing," Roose said. In addition to CHIP, the settle- ment also has local programs con- cerned with education, recreation, and outside contact. Eighty-four students from Swarthmore College have recently volunteered to work for the settlement, primarily doing research into existing social con- ditions in the area' Shown at 7:10 & 11:20 Co SUSAN!!DENBER8 LEES CRANE -WARREN STEVENS &N~ PARKE a~e~ra4? NORMANaMAILER ALSO Rata Pie Wood Henry Fonda Laren Bacall Mel Ferrer Shown at 9:20 Only Co-Starring LESLIE PARRSH and EDWARD EVERETT HORTON TECHNICOLOR' From-WARNER BROS. PLUS- "WHEN FISH FIGHT" 2COLOR CARTOONS Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results 4 L 8:30 G103 South Quad OPENS TUESDAY! $1.00 HELD OVER ! 2nd HIT WEEK! "HIGH LOW COMEDY. It is a strange and effecting film that should not be passed by."-PAUL SAWYER, Michigan Daily "BRILLIANT" -Brendan, Chit.,The Neaw hr' MOR.,GAN! 1' TODAY! 4e SATE 0 Program Information NO 2-6264 CARVING A LEGEND OF GREATNESS. from the Blue Ridge to the Rio Grandea ". TONITE THRU SUNDAY! 4LVAREZKELLY MSTARRN JICLRJLE*VIaORIA gM . PARIEk 'NAL RERLC CRMEL WRITTEN 8Y MUSIC BY PRODUCED BY DIRECTED BY HEA.g jOTHERS FOUR SING ALVAREZ KELYON COtUMBIA RECOROS' Today at 1 :00-3:00-5:10-7:20-9.30 :UA UNIVERSITY PLAYERS CHILDREN'S THEATRE presents JAMES THURBER'S THE 13 CLOCKS i~V 4 SATURDAY, Oct. 29, at 10 A.M. & 2'P.M. SUNDAY, Oct. 30, at 2 P.M. TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM --- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1~ To: University Players Children's Theatre Department of Speech University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO UNIVERSITY PLAYERS I enclose $_ ___ for _.- Children's tickets (50c) Adult tickets ($1) Performance Choice (circle) : Saturday 10 Saturday 2 . 'o I : il m